{"title":"Antonio Juanas(1762/1763 - 1816年后),R. Ryan Endris Leinfelden-Echterdingen编辑:Carus, 2019 pp. viii + 72, ISBN 979 0 007 18884 9","authors":"Jesús Herrera-Zamudio","doi":"10.1017/S147857062300009X","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Antonio Juanas is the composer with the largest number of musical manuscripts in the Archivo del Cabildo Catedral Metropolitano de México (hereafter ACCMM), which is the biggest repository of vice-regal music from Hispanic America. Despite what one might imagine given this fact, Juanas is one of the least studied chapel masters from Mexico City Cathedral. Fifteen years ago Javier Marín López wrote that ‘con un catálogo que supera las 500 composiciones, Juanas pertenece al grupo de compositores hasta ahora prácticamente desconocidos’ (with an [extant] output of more than five hundred compositions, Juanas belongs to the group of composers who have been practically unknown until now) (‘Consideraciones sobre la trayectoria profesional del músico Antonio Juanas (1762/63–después de 1816)’, Cuadernos Musicat 2 (2007), 14). At the time these words were written, there was only one edition of music by Juanas, which had appeared in a DMA dissertation (Teresa Bowers, University of Maryland, 1998), and not a single recording was available. Now, at the time of publication of the score reviewed here, there has only been one more edition of Juanas’s music, in a PhD dissertation by Dianne Lehmann Goldman (‘The Matins Responsory at Mexico City Cathedral, 1575–1815’, Northwestern University, 2014), and one CD (Antonio Juanas: Premiere Recordings of Selected Choral Works (Centaur CRC3663, 2018)), recorded by the Collegium Mundi Novi and conducted by Ryan Endris, the editor of the Ocho Responsorios para los Maitines de la Santísima Trinidad. Three years ago, another CD appeared, by La Real Capilla del Pópulo (Antonio Juanas: música coral para la Catedral de México (Sociedad Española de Musicología, 2020)). As Marín has noted, Juanas belongs to a group of composers active in New Spain whose music is unknown to us, and there is a common characteristic that links some of these musicians: they worked in Mexico during its colonial period. In practically all of the research investigating this repertory published in the twentieth century, there has been a common prejudice that ‘Mexican music was unfortunately in a depressed state at the end of the colonial period’, as Robert Murrell Stevenson put it in his Music in Mexico ((New York: Crowell, 1952), 173). It is generally assumed that since the vice-regal regime was in decline at that time, the quality of its music must have been declining too. I say ‘prejudice’ because even today – in 2023 – listeners have not really been able to hear the music created in Mexico at that time, especially those works composed for Mexico City Cathedral in the final decades of the vice-regal period. Although there has been significant work to bring music composed in Mexico to light over the last few decades, the scope of the source material means that there is still much left to do. Moreover, there is one additional element to highlight: that the country that we now call Mexico was a part of the Spanish Empire between 1521 and 1821. For this reason, and because he was an immigrant, the compositions of Juanas can be considered ‘music from Spain’ and not ‘Mexican music’.","PeriodicalId":11521,"journal":{"name":"Eighteenth Century Music","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-08-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Ocho Responsorios para los Maitines de la Santísima Trinidad Antonio Juanas (1762/1763–after 1816), ed. R. 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Fifteen years ago Javier Marín López wrote that ‘con un catálogo que supera las 500 composiciones, Juanas pertenece al grupo de compositores hasta ahora prácticamente desconocidos’ (with an [extant] output of more than five hundred compositions, Juanas belongs to the group of composers who have been practically unknown until now) (‘Consideraciones sobre la trayectoria profesional del músico Antonio Juanas (1762/63–después de 1816)’, Cuadernos Musicat 2 (2007), 14). At the time these words were written, there was only one edition of music by Juanas, which had appeared in a DMA dissertation (Teresa Bowers, University of Maryland, 1998), and not a single recording was available. Now, at the time of publication of the score reviewed here, there has only been one more edition of Juanas’s music, in a PhD dissertation by Dianne Lehmann Goldman (‘The Matins Responsory at Mexico City Cathedral, 1575–1815’, Northwestern University, 2014), and one CD (Antonio Juanas: Premiere Recordings of Selected Choral Works (Centaur CRC3663, 2018)), recorded by the Collegium Mundi Novi and conducted by Ryan Endris, the editor of the Ocho Responsorios para los Maitines de la Santísima Trinidad. Three years ago, another CD appeared, by La Real Capilla del Pópulo (Antonio Juanas: música coral para la Catedral de México (Sociedad Española de Musicología, 2020)). As Marín has noted, Juanas belongs to a group of composers active in New Spain whose music is unknown to us, and there is a common characteristic that links some of these musicians: they worked in Mexico during its colonial period. In practically all of the research investigating this repertory published in the twentieth century, there has been a common prejudice that ‘Mexican music was unfortunately in a depressed state at the end of the colonial period’, as Robert Murrell Stevenson put it in his Music in Mexico ((New York: Crowell, 1952), 173). It is generally assumed that since the vice-regal regime was in decline at that time, the quality of its music must have been declining too. I say ‘prejudice’ because even today – in 2023 – listeners have not really been able to hear the music created in Mexico at that time, especially those works composed for Mexico City Cathedral in the final decades of the vice-regal period. Although there has been significant work to bring music composed in Mexico to light over the last few decades, the scope of the source material means that there is still much left to do. Moreover, there is one additional element to highlight: that the country that we now call Mexico was a part of the Spanish Empire between 1521 and 1821. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
安东尼奥·胡安纳斯是在西班牙裔美国最大的副帝王音乐储存库——墨西哥卡布尔多大教堂大都会档案馆(以下简称ACCMM)中拥有最多音乐手稿的作曲家。尽管人们可能会想到这个事实,但胡安娜斯是墨西哥城大教堂中被研究最少的教堂大师之一。15年前,Javier Marín López写道,“con un catálogo que supera las 500 composiciones, Juanas pertenece al grupo de compositores hasta ahora prácticamente desconocidos”([现存的]超过500首作品的输出,Juanas属于迄今为止几乎不为人知的作曲家群体)(“conceraciones sobre la trayectoria professional del músico Antonio Juanas (1762/63 - despuacims de 1816)”,Cuadernos Musicat 2(2007), 14)。在写这些话的时候,只有一个版本的Juanas的音乐,它出现在DMA论文(Teresa Bowers, University of Maryland, 1998),没有一个录音可用。现在,在这里评论的乐谱出版时,只有一个版本的胡安纳斯的音乐,在Dianne Lehmann Goldman的博士论文中(“墨西哥城大教堂的早晨回应,1575-1815”,西北大学,2014年)和一张CD(安东尼奥·胡安纳斯:《合唱作品精选首演唱片》(Centaur CRC3663, 2018),由世界新学院录制,特立尼达Santísima《巴黎交响乐团》编辑Ryan Endris指挥。三年前,La Real Capilla del Pópulo发行了另一张CD (Antonio Juanas: música coral para La Catedral de m诈骗诈骗日(Sociedad Española de Musicología, 2020))。正如Marín所指出的那样,Juanas属于活跃在新西班牙的一群作曲家,他们的音乐对我们来说是未知的,并且有一个共同的特征将这些音乐家联系在一起:他们在墨西哥殖民时期工作。在几乎所有的研究调查这一保留在二十世纪出版,有一个共同的偏见,“墨西哥音乐不幸处于萧条状态在殖民时期结束”,正如罗伯特·莫雷尔·史蒂文森在他的音乐在墨西哥((纽约:克罗威尔,1952年),173)。人们普遍认为,由于当时的副皇权政权正在衰落,其音乐的质量也一定在下降。我之所以说“偏见”,是因为即使在2023年的今天,听众也没有真正听到当时在墨西哥创作的音乐,特别是那些在副帝王时期的最后几十年为墨西哥城大教堂创作的作品。尽管在过去的几十年里,人们已经做了大量的工作来让墨西哥的音乐作品公布于众,但原始材料的范围意味着还有很多工作要做。此外,还有一个需要强调的因素:我们现在称为墨西哥的国家在1521年至1821年间是西班牙帝国的一部分。由于这个原因,也因为他是一个移民,他的作品可以被认为是“来自西班牙的音乐”,而不是“墨西哥音乐”。
Ocho Responsorios para los Maitines de la Santísima Trinidad Antonio Juanas (1762/1763–after 1816), ed. R. Ryan Endris Leinfelden-Echterdingen: Carus, 2019 pp. viii + 72, ISBN 979 0 007 18884 9
Antonio Juanas is the composer with the largest number of musical manuscripts in the Archivo del Cabildo Catedral Metropolitano de México (hereafter ACCMM), which is the biggest repository of vice-regal music from Hispanic America. Despite what one might imagine given this fact, Juanas is one of the least studied chapel masters from Mexico City Cathedral. Fifteen years ago Javier Marín López wrote that ‘con un catálogo que supera las 500 composiciones, Juanas pertenece al grupo de compositores hasta ahora prácticamente desconocidos’ (with an [extant] output of more than five hundred compositions, Juanas belongs to the group of composers who have been practically unknown until now) (‘Consideraciones sobre la trayectoria profesional del músico Antonio Juanas (1762/63–después de 1816)’, Cuadernos Musicat 2 (2007), 14). At the time these words were written, there was only one edition of music by Juanas, which had appeared in a DMA dissertation (Teresa Bowers, University of Maryland, 1998), and not a single recording was available. Now, at the time of publication of the score reviewed here, there has only been one more edition of Juanas’s music, in a PhD dissertation by Dianne Lehmann Goldman (‘The Matins Responsory at Mexico City Cathedral, 1575–1815’, Northwestern University, 2014), and one CD (Antonio Juanas: Premiere Recordings of Selected Choral Works (Centaur CRC3663, 2018)), recorded by the Collegium Mundi Novi and conducted by Ryan Endris, the editor of the Ocho Responsorios para los Maitines de la Santísima Trinidad. Three years ago, another CD appeared, by La Real Capilla del Pópulo (Antonio Juanas: música coral para la Catedral de México (Sociedad Española de Musicología, 2020)). As Marín has noted, Juanas belongs to a group of composers active in New Spain whose music is unknown to us, and there is a common characteristic that links some of these musicians: they worked in Mexico during its colonial period. In practically all of the research investigating this repertory published in the twentieth century, there has been a common prejudice that ‘Mexican music was unfortunately in a depressed state at the end of the colonial period’, as Robert Murrell Stevenson put it in his Music in Mexico ((New York: Crowell, 1952), 173). It is generally assumed that since the vice-regal regime was in decline at that time, the quality of its music must have been declining too. I say ‘prejudice’ because even today – in 2023 – listeners have not really been able to hear the music created in Mexico at that time, especially those works composed for Mexico City Cathedral in the final decades of the vice-regal period. Although there has been significant work to bring music composed in Mexico to light over the last few decades, the scope of the source material means that there is still much left to do. Moreover, there is one additional element to highlight: that the country that we now call Mexico was a part of the Spanish Empire between 1521 and 1821. For this reason, and because he was an immigrant, the compositions of Juanas can be considered ‘music from Spain’ and not ‘Mexican music’.